Monday, 6 March 2017

http://www.myearnathomeclub.com/safe-driving-breathalyzer/

In 2016, we considered six new breathalyzers and called in three for testing: the TruBreez Premier, the TruBreez 2020, and the Pro-Tec X-2000 Professional Grade Breathalyzer. Safe Driving Breathalyzer Judging from their stats and price, these new competitors look like a longshot to unseat the BACtrack S80 Pro, and we are not testing them against police equipment right now. However, if any of them emerge as unpredictably strong contenders in casual use over the next few months, we will put them to a more rigorous test for the next update of this guide.

Under police supervision, I consumed a controlled amount of alcohol over a 45-minute period. The amount of alcohol—7 ounces of Jameson Irish Whiskey served as seven Jameson and Gingers—was administered according to my sex, height, weight, and age (for the record, I’m a 40-year-old male measuring 5 foot 7 and weighing about 250 pounds). The amount of alcohol was chosen with a specific purpose in mind: to put me over the legal limit, which in the province of British Columbia (and many US states) is a BAC of 0.08 percent. Safe Driving Breathalyzer Ideally, we wanted to get a sample at a minimum BAC of 0.10 percent, which is enough to register a “fail” warning on the police department’s portable testing hardware. Cheers.

Once the 45-minute time limit had elapsed, we waited 20 minutes to allow my body to absorb the alcohol I’d ingested. We then ran our first test with the police department’s Alco-Sensor IV handheld portable breathalyzer. To confirm that the Alco-Sensor IV’s reading was accurate, I submitted a breath sample to the department’s Intox EC/IR II tabletop hardware, as well.

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